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Engineering workstation → push payload to PLC

Compromise the OT engineer's laptop (corporate-network adjacent, jumphost-reachable). Use legit engineering tools (TIA Portal / Studio 5000) to download attacker ladder logic to the PLC.

Filed by AD Knowledge Base
§ Kill-chainDrag · zoom · scroll

§ Context

Assumed environment: foothold in corporate IT. Reach to the engineering workstation via shared-credential AD account / jump-host with weak segmentation. PLC programming software installed.

§ Steps

  1. 01
    Process disruption / physical impactImpact
    T1486Data Encrypted for Impact
  2. 02
    Foothold in corporate ITInitial Access
    T1078Valid Accounts
  3. 03
    Download modified logic to PLCImpact
    OT-MODBUS-WRITEModbus TCP Write to PLC
  4. 04
    Modify ladder logic / function blockImpact
    OT-S7-SIEMENSSiemens S7 Protocol Abuse
  5. 05
    Use installed TIA Portal / Studio 5000Lateral Movement
    OT-ENG-WORKSTATIONEngineering Workstation Pivot
  6. 06
    Pivot to engineering workstationLateral Movement
    OT-IT-OT-PIVOTIT → OT Network Pivot

§ References

§ Frequently asked

What is the "Engineering workstation → push payload to PLC" attack path?
Compromise the OT engineer's laptop (corporate-network adjacent, jumphost-reachable). Use legit engineering tools (TIA Portal / Studio 5000) to download attacker ladder logic to the PLC. It chains 6 steps drawn from real-world offensive-security techniques.
What starting position does this attack require?
The first step is Process disruption / physical impact (T1486) — a impact primitive. Assumed environment: foothold in corporate IT.
What is the final impact of this kill-chain?
The final step lands on Pivot to engineering workstation (OT-IT-OT-PIVOT), which falls under Lateral Movement. From here, an operator typically pivots into post-exploitation or maintains persistence.
How can defenders detect or prevent this attack?
Detection and prevention vary per step. Refer to each linked MITRE ATT&CK entry under "References" — every technique on that page lists defensive controls, detection telemetry, and known threat-actor usage.

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